The Yoga-system of Patañjali: Or, The Ancient Hindu Doctrine of Concentration of Mind, Embracing the Mnemonic Rules, Called Yoga-sūtras, of Patañjali, and the Comment, Called Yoga-bhāshya, Attributed to Veda-Vyāsa, and the Explanation, Called Tattva-vāicāradī, of Vāchaspati-Miçra |
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Common terms and phrases
abstentions action aids to yoga aspects guna atman atom attain avidya balanced-state becomes Benares Bikaner birth body Brahma Calc cease central-organ coarse Compare concentrated insight conscious of objects Consequences of constraint correlation demerit described discriminative discernment distinct dwindled effect elements Energy of Intellect enters into mutations escape essence existence experience external-aspects feeling-of-personality five hindrances fixed-attention fluctuations of mind-stuff follows fruition hindrances Içvara idea infatuation inference intended-object intuitive knowledge Isolation kind knower knowledge latent-deposit of karma length-of-life Mahābhāṣya master means mind mutation non-sight object-of-sight objector says organs pain Pañcaçikha particular passionlessness Patanjali perception perfection pleasure predicate-relations presented-idea primary matter primary-matter process-of-knowing purpose rajas and tamas reason reference relation reply restriction result of constraint round-of-rebirths Samkhya Sanskrit sattva Seer self-castigation sense sequence Smṛti sounds sources-of-valid-ideas subconscious-impressions subliminal subliminal-impressions substance subtile object super-reflective sūtra syllables thing thinking thinking-substance time-forms time-variation tion undifferentiated-consciousness undisturbed calm verbal-communication Vijñāna words yogin
Popular passages
Page 353 - Volume 9. The Little Clay Cart (Mrcchakatika), a Hindu drama attributed to King Shudraka. Translated from the original Sanskrit and Prakrits into English prose and verse by AW RYDEB, Instructor in Sanskrit in Harvard University.
Page 353 - Vedic Concordance: being an alphabetic index to every line of every stanza of the published Vedic literature and to the liturgical formulas thereof, that is, an index to the Vedic mantras, together with an account of their variations in the different Vedic books.
Page 353 - Volumes 7 and 8. Atharva-Veda. Translated, with a critical and exegetical commentary, by the late Professor WD WHITNEY, of Yale University ; revised and brought nearer to completion and edited by CR LANMAN. 1905. Pages, 1212. (The work includes critical notes on the text, with various readings of European and Hindu mss. ; readings of the...
Page 254 - As a result of passionlessness even with regard to these [perfections] there follows, after the dwindling of the seeds of the defects, Isolation, iii.
Page xi - A Catalogue of Sanskrit Manuscripts in the Library of His Highness the Maharaja of Bikaner.
Page 7 - So long as the root exists, there will be fruition from it, birth and length-of-life and kind-of -experience.
Page 353 - Cakuntala, a Hindu drama by Kalidasa: the Bengali recension, critically edited in the original Sanskrit and Prakrits by RICHARD PISCHEL, late Professor of Sanskrit at the University of Berlin.
Page 6 - It is the consciousness of being master on the part of one who has rid himself of thirst for either seen or revealed objects.
Page 293 - Bibl. Indica edition ; and Woods, " Because, while the (physical) thing remains the same the mind-stuffs are different (therefore the two are upon) distinct levels of existence," " Yoga System of Patanjali ", HOS.
Page 23 - Icvara's mind-stuff becomes subconsciously-impressed by the contemplation. And although the Icvara's mind-stuff be tending towards a homogeneity with primary-matter, still, — when the period of the great mundanedissolution has come to a full end, under the pressure of the subconsciousimpression of the contemplation, — it enters into a mutation of precisely the same kind as a state of sattva. In precisely the same way Chaitra contemplates ' To-morrow I must get up just at day-break ' ; and then...